logo
#

Latest news with #Harvard&SmithsonianCenterforAstrophysics

Scientists discover rare space alcohol that could explain how life began on the Earth
Scientists discover rare space alcohol that could explain how life began on the Earth

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Science
  • Time of India

Scientists discover rare space alcohol that could explain how life began on the Earth

Astronomers have uncovered a cosmic clue that takes us closer to answering one of humanity's oldest questions, 'How did life begin on Earth?' It has been found out that a young star system, located roughly 330 light-years away, is awash in alcohol! The discovered alcohol types and their isotopes are among the building blocks of the starting points for creating even complex organic molecules like amino acids. Locating these bits in such a young planetary nursery suggests that the seeds of life might be spread throughout the galaxy, tied to how comets and icy materials form. An alcohol-soaked star system A discovery around the star HD 10045, which is about 330 light-years from Earth, has for the first time, allowed scientists to detect not only methanol, an alcohol compound, but also its rare isotopes in the protoplanetary disk encircling this young star. Published on June 5 in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, the research was based on data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile What makes these bits the 'cosmic alcohol'? Methanol is a simple alcohol that plays a crucial role in the formation of organic molecules like amino acids, the essential building blocks of life. Although methanol itself has been spotted in other star-forming disks, detecting its isotopes, which are also much rarer variants of the same, is an important step in the discovery of life's building block on Earth. As lead author Alice Booth from the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics explained, 'Finding these isotopes of methanol gives essential insight into the history of ingredients necessary to build life here on Earth.' by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Rabien Ab: ten wysokiej klasy aparat słuchowy zdominuje rynek w 2025 roku DRUGIE UCHO Undo Why is HD 100453 different from the others? This star is about 1.6 times bigger than our Sun. Because it's larger, the disk of gas and dust around it is warmer. That warmth keeps methanol in gas form, even far from the star, making it much easier for telescopes like ALMA to detect. In contrast, stars smaller than our Sun have cooler disks, where methanol usually freezes into ice, making it much harder to spot. Another interesting factor about it is that the amount of methanol, as compared to other organic molecules in this star's disk, is very similar to what we see in comets from our own solar system. This gives scientists a clue that these icy materials might come together to form comets, which can then crash into young planets and deliver important ingredients for life. 'This research supports the idea that comets may have played a big role in delivering important organic material to the Earth billions of years ago,' said Milou Temmink, a PhD student who studies planet-forming disks at Leiden University A mix of space chemicals has life-building potential What scientists found goes beyond just simple methanol. The study suggests there may be even more complex molecules hiding in the gas around the star, including things that could be the early building blocks of amino acids and sugars, which are key ingredients for life. According to , these discoveries include rare types of methanol like ¹³CH₃OH and possibly deuterated methanol. Their presence means that icy materials floating in space might survive even during the wild, chaotic process of planet formation. What could it mean for life beyond Earth? By following these organic molecules, be it tiny ice grains, comets, or to planets, scientists are starting to connect the dots on how life might form in different parts of the universe. The chemical mix found around the star HD 100453 could be very similar to what helped spark life on Earth billions of years ago.

Astrophysicists Discovered Strange New Objects in Our Galaxy ‘Unlike Anything Else'
Astrophysicists Discovered Strange New Objects in Our Galaxy ‘Unlike Anything Else'

Yahoo

time29-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Astrophysicists Discovered Strange New Objects in Our Galaxy ‘Unlike Anything Else'

Here's what you'll learn when you read this story: The Central Molecular Zone, spanning 700 light-years across the heart of the galaxy, contains a majority of the dense gas in the Milky Way. While analyzing this region with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA), an international team of scientists discovered a slew of strange "slim filaments" unassociated with star-forming regions. The filaments are likely part of what the researchers call "space tornadoes," which distributes material throughout the CMZ efficiently. It's been little more than half a century since scientists first proposed that a supermassive black hole lies at the heart of the Milky Way. And in the decades since, we've discovered a remarkable amount about our particular corner of the universe—but there's always more to learn. One area that remains a particular mystery is the Central Molecular Zone, or CMZ, which stretches some 700 light-years across at the heart of the galaxy. This region contains roughly 80 percent of all dense gas in the Milky Way, which—according to the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics—accounts for about tens of millions of solar masses of material. Home to giant molecular clouds and numerous star-forming clusters, the CMZ is a swirling mystery, and there is no other place in the galaxy like it. Now, a new study—led by a team of astrophysicists drawing upon data from the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) in Chile—is adding another curiosity to this already head-scratching region of the galaxy: unexpected 'slim filaments' that have left astronomers guessing at their origin. Details of this surprising discovery were published in the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics. An array of 66 radio telescopes located under the remarkably clear skies of the Chajnantor Plateau in the Atacama Desert, ALMA (as its name suggests) is particularly well suited to examining the CMZ thanks to its high angular resolution and its ability to trace certain molecules found in abundance in this region of space. Among those molecules is silicon oxide (SiO), which serves as a tracer for shockwaves in the CMZ. By tracing the spectral lines of SiO, astronomers can better understand this chaotic environment—and, as it turns out, discover previously unknown filament structures. 'SiO is currently the only molecule that exclusively traces shocks, and the SiO 5-4 rotational transition is only detectable in shocked regions that have both relatively high densities and high temperatures,' Kai Yang, lead author of the study from Shanghai Jiao Tong University, said in a press statement. 'This makes it a particularly valuable tool for tracing shock-induced processes in the dense regions of the CMZ. When we checked the ALMA images showing the outflows, we noticed these long and narrow filaments spatially offset from any star-forming regions. Unlike any objects we know, these filaments really surprised us. Since then, we have been pondering what they are.' Using the SiO emission lines (along with those of eight other molecules), the astronomers confirmed that their velocities were inconsistent with outflows, show no association with dust emission, and are in hydrostatic equilibrium—a delicate balance between gravity and pressure. All these anomalous findings, packaged alongside insights like 'unlike any objects we know, ' inspire fantasies of massive alien structures hiding out in the heart of our galaxy. But the astronomers have a more science-based explanation, and it is no less mesmerizing. 'We can envision these as space tornados: they are violent streams of gas, they dissipate shortly, and they distribute materials into the environment efficiently,' Xing Lu, a co-author of the study from Shanghai Astronomical Observatory, said in a press statement. 'Our research contributes to the fascinating Galactic Center landscape by uncovering these slim filaments as an important part of material circulation.' The authors theorize that these filaments may be part of a depletion-replenishment cycle at the heart of our galaxy. First, shock waves create these filaments. Then, as these filaments dissipate, they 'refuel' shock-released material in the CMZ and freeze back into dust grains. As scientists delve deeper into the mysteries of these filaments—and if they're as widespread as this particular ALMA sample would suggest—then we may have uncovered an important cyclic process that lies at the heart of our galaxy. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life?

A half-ton Soviet-era spacecraft stuck in orbit for 53 years is expected to make an uncontrolled plunge back to Earth any day now.
A half-ton Soviet-era spacecraft stuck in orbit for 53 years is expected to make an uncontrolled plunge back to Earth any day now.

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

A half-ton Soviet-era spacecraft stuck in orbit for 53 years is expected to make an uncontrolled plunge back to Earth any day now.

A Soviet-era spacecraft launched in the 1970s is expected to make its return to Earth sometime this weekend. The unmanned robotic spacecraft, Kosmos 482, originally set out to land on the scorching surface of Venus but it never completed its mission. Instead, it's been stuck in Earth's orbit for over 50 years. After all this time, the half-ton object, about the size of a concert grand piano or a male polar bear, is finally expected to make an uncontrolled plunge back to Earth. The problem is, experts aren't exactly sure when — or where — it will land. (Yikes.) Yahoo News spoke with Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, about what we do know about the object and whether we should be worried. His responses below have been lightly edited for length and clarity. McDowell: It was originally meant to be the Soviet probe, Venus 9 [that would travel to the surface of Venus]. They launched it in March 1972, along with Venus 8. The rockets put their space probes in parking orbit around the Earth, and then fired the upper stages to send them out toward Venus. Venus 8 got to Venus. But the upper stage for Venus 9 broke down halfway through its rocket firing, stranding the probe in orbit around the Earth. Rather than admit that they'd had a failure, the Soviet Union said 'Oh, we just launched another Kosmos satellite. It's totally fine. We're calling it Kosmos 482. Nothing to see here.' That is like their standard practice. They're now up to Kosmos 2500-something. They throw all their military satellites in there, but also their failures that they don't want to admit. There were a few pieces [of Kosmos 482] left in orbit. There was the rocket stage, there was the main part of the Venus probe, and there was this half-ton sphere that was meant to be the thing that would enter Venus's atmosphere and survive to the surface. Every time these things go around the Earth, they skim the atmosphere and lose a little bit of energy. So they don't go quite so high up the next time. The orbit shrinks over time until eventually the [objects] reenter. Two of the [three] objects reentered in the early 1980s, and there was this one object left that didn't seem to be affected as much by Earth's atmosphere. After 50 years of this going around the Earth every few hours, it has lost enough energy for its orbit to shrink enough that now it's on the verge of reentry. Sometime over the weekend, it's going to get low enough that it can no longer orbit and the atmosphere is too dense. It will slow down rapidly and crash onto the Earth. After 50 years, the batteries are stone cold so there's no way the parachutes will work. [The object weighs] half a ton. It's traveling at 17,000 miles an hour, just like everything else in low Earth orbit. But once it reenters, you'll see this big fireball, and that is the speed energy getting converted into heat energy. The heat shield may protect it from burning up and melting during reentry. It can't fly through the air at 17,000 miles an hour. As it gets dense enough in the atmosphere, [the object] slows down really rapidly because of this enormous headwind. That speed gets converted into heat, and everything slows down. Once it crashes down to the lower atmosphere, it'll only be going at a couple-hundred miles an hour. Somewhere between London in the north and the Falkland Islands in the south (off the east coast of Argentina in the South Atlantic Ocean). So somewhere between 52 degrees north and 52 degrees south. If you're in Scotland or northern Canada or Antarctica, it's not going to come over you. Pretty much anywhere else is still in the frame. Until we can know exactly when it's coming down, we won't know where because if you're an hour off, you're 17,000 miles wrong. This is always true with uncontrolled satellite reentries. We never know where they're going to come down until after the fact. Because the Earth is a big target, the chances that it's going to come down near you is tiny. Most of the Earth is ocean, but maybe we'll be unlucky and it'll hit land. Even today, most land is unoccupied, so the chance that it will hit a person is very small. It's not zero, but it's small. I think any one satellite reentry hitting someone is super unlikely, but we're having so many of them now that we're kind of rolling the dice each time, and eventually we're going to get unlucky. We get about three a day. Most of them are small enough that they melt entirely, burn up and don't reach the ground. Every month or so we get a couple that are going to leave something reaching the ground. Usually they fall over the ocean. Every few months, we get a case where we found a bit on the ground that's from the satellite reentry. What's unusual about this object is that it's designed to survive Venus, which has utterly hellish conditions. It was over-designed for surviving a reentry into Earth's atmosphere. Mind you, it's been in space for over 50 years, so whether the heat shield is still pristine or not, is unclear. Normally what happens is the satellite will melt, even if it doesn't completely burn up, and it will break into chunks. Even if they survive to the ground, they'll be strewn over several hundred miles of reentry track. So there's not much in any one place. But for this [Kosmos 482 object], it's going to come down in one half-ton lump, most likely. So that'd be bad if there's anyone underneath. One thing that's important to know about is the liability convention, which is part of space law. Suppose this crashes into some building in the U.S., or into your garden shed. What do you do? The U.S. government talks to the Russian government and says, 'We have a bit of your space debris under the liability convention. You're entitled to have it back, but you're also liable for any damage that it caused.'

A half-ton Soviet-era spacecraft stuck in orbit for 53 years is expected to make an uncontrolled plunge back to Earth any day now.
A half-ton Soviet-era spacecraft stuck in orbit for 53 years is expected to make an uncontrolled plunge back to Earth any day now.

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

A half-ton Soviet-era spacecraft stuck in orbit for 53 years is expected to make an uncontrolled plunge back to Earth any day now.

A Soviet-era spacecraft launched in the 1970s is expected to make its return to Earth sometime this weekend. The unmanned robotic spacecraft, Kosmos 482, originally set out to land on the scorching surface of Venus but it never completed its mission. Instead, it's been stuck in Earth's orbit for over 50 years. After all this time, the half-ton object, about the size of a concert grand piano or a male polar bear, is finally expected to make an uncontrolled plunge back to Earth. The problem is, experts aren't exactly sure when — or where — it will land. (Yikes.) Yahoo News spoke with Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, about what we do know about the object and whether we should be worried. His responses below have been lightly edited for length and clarity. McDowell: It was originally meant to be the Soviet probe, Venus 9 [that would travel to the surface of Venus]. They launched it in March 1972, along with Venus 8. The rockets put their space probes in parking orbit around the Earth, and then fired the upper stages to send them out toward Venus. Venus 8 got to Venus. But the upper stage for Venus 9 broke down halfway through its rocket firing, stranding the probe in orbit around the Earth. Rather than admit that they'd had a failure, the Soviet Union said 'Oh, we just launched another Kosmos satellite. It's totally fine. We're calling it Kosmos 482. Nothing to see here.' That is like their standard practice. They're now up to Kosmos 2500-something. They throw all their military satellites in there, but also their failures that they don't want to admit. There were a few pieces [of Kosmos 482] left in orbit. There was the rocket stage, there was the main part of the Venus probe, and there was this half-ton sphere that was meant to be the thing that would enter Venus's atmosphere and survive to the surface. Every time these things go around the Earth, they skim the atmosphere and lose a little bit of energy. So they don't go quite so high up the next time. The orbit shrinks over time until eventually the [objects] reenter. Two of the [three] objects reentered in the early 1980s, and there was this one object left that didn't seem to be affected as much by Earth's atmosphere. After 50 years of this going around the Earth every few hours, it has lost enough energy for its orbit to shrink enough that now it's on the verge of reentry. Sometime over the weekend, it's going to get low enough that it can no longer orbit and the atmosphere is too dense. It will slow down rapidly and crash onto the Earth. After 50 years, the batteries are stone cold so there's no way the parachutes will work. [The object weighs] half a ton. It's traveling at 17,000 miles an hour, just like everything else in low Earth orbit. But once it reenters, you'll see this big fireball, and that is the speed energy getting converted into heat energy. The heat shield may protect it from burning up and melting during reentry. It can't fly through the air at 17,000 miles an hour. As it gets dense enough in the atmosphere, [the object] slows down really rapidly because of this enormous headwind. That speed gets converted into heat, and everything slows down. Once it crashes down to the lower atmosphere, it'll only be going at a couple-hundred miles an hour. Somewhere between London in the north and the Falkland Islands in the south (off the east coast of Argentina in the South Atlantic Ocean). So somewhere between 52 degrees north and 52 degrees south. If you're in Scotland or northern Canada or Antarctica, it's not going to come over you. Pretty much anywhere else is still in the frame. Until we can know exactly when it's coming down, we won't know where because if you're an hour off, you're 17,000 miles wrong. This is always true with uncontrolled satellite reentries. We never know where they're going to come down until after the fact. Because the Earth is a big target, the chances that it's going to come down near you is tiny. Most of the Earth is ocean, but maybe we'll be unlucky and it'll hit land. Even today, most land is unoccupied, so the chance that it will hit a person is very small. It's not zero, but it's small. I think any one satellite reentry hitting someone is super unlikely, but we're having so many of them now that we're kind of rolling the dice each time, and eventually we're going to get unlucky. We get about three a day. Most of them are small enough that they melt entirely, burn up and don't reach the ground. Every month or so we get a couple that are going to leave something reaching the ground. Usually they fall over the ocean. Every few months, we get a case where we found a bit on the ground that's from the satellite reentry. What's unusual about this object is that it's designed to survive Venus, which has utterly hellish conditions. It was over-designed for surviving a reentry into Earth's atmosphere. Mind you, it's been in space for over 50 years, so whether the heat shield is still pristine or not, is unclear. Normally what happens is the satellite will melt, even if it doesn't completely burn up, and it will break into chunks. Even if they survive to the ground, they'll be strewn over several hundred miles of reentry track. So there's not much in any one place. But for this [Kosmos 482 object], it's going to come down in one half-ton lump, most likely. So that'd be bad if there's anyone underneath. One thing that's important to know about is the liability convention, which is part of space law. Suppose this crashes into some building in the U.S., or into your garden shed. What do you do? The U.S. government talks to the Russian government and says, 'We have a bit of your space debris under the liability convention. You're entitled to have it back, but you're also liable for any damage that it caused.'

53-Year-Old Soviet Spacecraft to Perform 'Final Death Plunge'
53-Year-Old Soviet Spacecraft to Perform 'Final Death Plunge'

Yahoo

time05-05-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

53-Year-Old Soviet Spacecraft to Perform 'Final Death Plunge'

After decades of inadvertently orbiting Earth, Kosmos 482 is ready to come home. Astronomers believe the Soviet-era spacecraft is ready to perform its "final death plunge," which will most likely occur this weekend. Kosmos 482 will either disintegrate upon atmospheric reentry or smack into Earth's surface—and one renowned astrophysicist is anticipating the latter. The Soviet Union launched Kosmos 482 on March 31, 1972. At the time, the spacecraft was part of the Venera program, which aimed to place multiple probes in Venus's atmosphere and on its surface. While many Venera probes succeeded, the one launched that day did not: Its escape stage exploded as it attempted to achieve a Venus transfer trajectory, causing the spacecraft to break apart. Some of its fragments decayed within 48 hours, causing space debris to fall onto New Zealand. But the lander probe survived. Back then, it was tradition to attach "Kosmos" to the name of any Soviet spacecraft that achieved Earth orbit, accidentally or not; as a result, the failed Venera probe became Kosmos 482. It's circled our planet ever since, starting as high as 6,000 miles and gradually sinking down to its current maximum of 245 miles above Earth's surface. Now, the 1,092-pound hunk of metal is preparing to re-enter the planet's atmosphere, according to computer models tracking Kosmos 482's slow descent. "It's in its final death plunge," Jonathan McDowell, an astronomer at the Harvard & Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, said on NPR's All Things Considered. The meter-wide Kosmos 482 lander probe. Credit: NASA McDowell tracks satellite and space debris, sharing the juiciest of his findings via social media. Many times, these objects aerosolize upon reentry; on occasion, they survive the trip. Since Kosmos 482 was originally designed to withstand Venus's atmosphere, McDowell thinks this particular spacecraft could be a survivor. "What I expect is instead of burning up and melting, it will reenter essentially undamaged," McDowell told NPR. "And so somewhere on Earth, this half ton sphere will fall out of the sky at a couple hundred miles an hour. And most likely it'll be over the ocean, and no one will ever know….There's a not trivial chance that it could hit somewhere where it damages property. And there's a small chance—but it's like one in thousands—that it could hurt somebody." Marco Langbroek, a spy satellite researcher at the Dutch satellite tracking station SatTrackCam Leiden, co-developed a reentry model that places Kosmos 482's potential landing anywhere between Canada, Russia, and the southern end of South America—a vast swath of Earth that doesn't afford many global citizens much comfort. But even this blurry geographical window might not be accurate. "The reentry is an uncontrolled reentry," Langbroek notes. "At the moment, we cannot say with any degree of certainty when and where the Kosmos 482 Descent Craft exactly will reenter."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store